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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1938)
SIX tOSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1938. By L. K. P. Knthorlno llnpburn, rsvcnlinn her talont nfl a comn.llonuo, with 'ary (irant aimoftito lior, In "Fliinu- Jug up Ilaby, whlrh opened ye torday at Hunt'n Indian for a throe nay run, In being offered a iho ouiBtaiidliiK latiKh allow of the serpen by IlKO. Hacked by a sparklliiK cant headed by Charles Itugglcg and May Jtobson, the Hlars "ko to town" In uproarioiiH fawn- ion. The atory '1b basoil on tho go getter aetlvltlna of MIbs Hepburn, a madcap heireag with n remark able propensity for creating trou blc, Although Cary Grant Is n studloUH profofisor, fntureflUitl only In completing a huge dlnottaur skeleton and In promoting a mil lion dollars to carry on tho work of hlB museum, Miss Hepburn de cides Bho uuniH him. HIh fata Ih sealed from that moment, pane dally when she dlacoverH ho In tends to marry IiIb Hecrotary. Virtually kidnaping (Irani; to help her hldo a tame leopard her brother has flnnt from Hoijih America, Bhe plungen the hupltwi profnsflor Into a maelHtrom of il diciiloiiH advuiitureH and unexpect ed ' Hllnatlons thai aro said to make' the pieturo the blgget piece of merriment of the season. The leopard la tho "baby" of tho title. The leopard and a fiendish dog add plenty of feline and canlno ram plications to tho plot. -o HIGH RADIO SPOTS a AUNT EMMA WOTS: Mutual Highlights Mutual'H, riguKH have Just vealcd that 22M per cent of all programs heard over the coowt-to- coast network are devoted to th( prnseiitaiion of educatlonul and line musical programs. Out of a total of 102) network hours a week, 222 hours are do voted to programs on lit mat me, education, public affairs and ser ious music. The programs that are listed un der theHu cluHslficuilons orlgimae from the major studios of Mutual's amilated stutions, thus giving lis teners a cross-scetionul knowledge or the cult u nil tastes and educa tional developments of the entire nation, rather than confining these broadcasts to a few major cltlea. Duchln Makes Farewell Broadcast of "Hour of Romance" Mdy Duchln and his orchestra make their farewell broadcast for the sponsors of tho "Hour of Ko- mance program, which rings down Ir h curtain following the broadcast on TutiMlny. .March 22, al 7 p. over KKN'lt and the .Mutual net work. imcbln'B final broadcast marks the end of a Merles of musical broadcasts, set to a romantic theme, which attained outstanding popularity with radio audiences over the nation. Spanlth Crisis Discussed by Dr. Polyzoldes l)r. Adamant los Polyzoldes, na tionally known comimmtator and authority on international auairs, will discuss (he up-totne-minute developments on the Spanish crisis, and Its Influence on huropeau peace, when lie makeB his weekly appearance at the KltXH-Don Lee microphone on Tuesday, March 11, from 8:30 to 8 MS p. in. - IJurlng his talk Polyzoldes will discuss, from the American point of view, the trend of affairs In middle Europe resulting from 'Hit lers seizure of Austriu and. ,11s conse(uent threat to Czechoslova kia. . New Regulations for Administration Of Western Range Lands Provide For Grazing of 100,000,000 Head of Stock R.H.S. DEBATERS TO MEET DALLAS HIGH : The Rosehurg senior high school debate team wilt meet the tenm from DallaB high school nt Ku gene Monday, March UK, according to instructions received hero to day. The Itoseburg tenm won the district championship In a debate tournament, at Kugono recently, and will moot Dallas In tho first of the Inter-dlBtrlct elimination contests. The winner of tho Hose- burg-Dallas .meet will debate the winner or the Coqulllc-Mcdioro clash, April 4, and tho victor In that mutch will meet the Colum bia river-North Wtllamotto winner In the western Oregon finals April 11. The champions of the cast and west state divisions will compolo the following weok Tor tho state tltlo. MARKET REPORTS PRODUCE PORTLAND, Match 21 (AP) iUUTTER Prints: . A grade niac in parchment wrappers; 324c In cartons; I) grade ,'tUc In parch ment wrappers; 31c In cartons. HUTTKKPAT Portland deliv ery, buying price: A grade 30404c country stations; A grade 2SAn; II grade 2c less; C grade Gc less. ICUGH Ituylng prices by whole Balers: Specials 2ttc; oxtrtiB ll!c; Htumlunln llic; special mediums IGci' extra mediums Mc; standard mediums llc; undorgrudes 1-1 ti. . CHK10SK Oregon trlplots Km;; Oregon loaf 10c. Brokers will pay Jc below quotations. COUNTRY MKAT3 Selling price to retailers: Country Killed hogfl best butcher under 1(10 lbs. 11-1 2c; vealers ltic; light and thin It-13c; heavy 10c; hulls 10c; can nor cows 7i-8Je; cutter cows 81 12c; lambs l(l-17c; ewes G-10c. IJVK POUiyntY-Kuylng prices: Leghorn broilers H-2 lbs. ll-20c; colored springs 2-34 lbs. l!l-20c; over 34 lbs. 19-20c; leghorn hens over 34 lbs. 14-1 fic; under 34 lbs. l.M4c; . colored hens to 5 lbs. IS 19c; over 5 lbs. lS-lilc; No. 2 grade 2c less. TURKKYS Buying price: Hens 24e; No. 1 toms 22i Selling price, tonis 24c, hens 2 tic, . POTATOKS New Florida 1.75; Hawaii 1.00 per fit) lbs. . POTATOKS Yakima Gems 75o; local tl0-70o cental; central .Oregon SM.OTt cental. ONIONS Dry 2.00-2.25 cenlol. WOOL 11)37, nominal: Willam ette valley medium 23c; coarse fttul hraida 23c; fall lamb wool ISc; etiRtern Oregon flue, nominal. MAY Belling price to retail ers: Alfalfa No. 1 lS.oo-lS.&O ton; oat-vetch 14.1)0 ton: clover 12.00 ton; timothy, valley 15.00' ton, Portland. HOPS Nominal 1937 llMEic. MOHAIR Nominal 1937 clip 35c lb. CASCARA HARK Ruylug price 1937 pee) 5c lb. LIVESTOCK PORTLAND. Ore.. March 21 (AP) (U. S. Dept. Agr.) HOGS: Market month 15 lower than Krl--lay, Kr-21f lb. ilrlvelus $9.35-9.10. carload lot $9.if. 225-2SD lb. SS.05 9.00, light lights jS.tifi-N.s"!. packing sows 17.25-7.50, feeder pigs $X.60 9.00. CATTLK: Steera slow, few sales steady 25 lower, generally asking steady, cows and heifers fully steady, bulls steady 25 higher, vealers steady 50 lower, fed loads fed steers I7.00 S.15, load 1072 lb. $s,25. common down to $5.50, fed lielferB $0.75-7.50, low culler and cutter cowb $3.50-4,25, fat dairy type cowa $5,76, good beef cows Jti.00-6.fi0, load young cows $0.vS5. bulls $5.25-6.50, good-choice vealers $9.00-10.00. HHKKP: Fat lambs slow 25 50 lower, slaughter ewes 50 higher, load 93 lb. fed wooled lambs $8.50. two heavier loads IS.10-S.25, few trucked In $7.50-8.00, load 102 lb. shorn lambs 8.U0. load shorn ewes $4.75. others $3.85-4.50, culls down to $1.75. W A S H I NCJ TON, M a rch 2 1 . (AP) Secretary Ickoa' set-up of new regulations for the administra tion of 120,000,000 acres of range land In the far west provide for grazing of 100,000.000 head of live stock on the federal range on a term permit busis and embody con servation policies for perpetuation of the range. The new regulations will sup plant rules which hnvo been In ef fect slnco 1931 when the govern ment Instituted a "homo rule pol icy" under tho laylor gnulnx act. K. R. Carpenter, grazing direc tor, said :dtvislon of grazing plans contemplated early installation of the term permit system. "Within a year," he said, "It Is expected the term permits will have been put In effect In at least one grazing district In Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Now Mexico. Nevada, Montana, Oregon, IHnh and Wyoming." orty-nfne grazing districts eventually will be affected. Pending Installation of tho new term permit nrr.ingomunts , tem porary licenses, extending through the grazing season of 1939, will he Issued, Carpenter said. Approxl-1 mutely 20,000 term pormlts will he required before (he switch to the new regulations has been com pleted. Features Outlined As outlined by carpenter, major features of tho new federal range codo, are: 1. Range conservation through computation of an animal unit month tha amount of feed neces sary for ono cow for one month and tho carrying capacity of the laud. In calculations one horse or five goats or five sheep are consld-i ered tho equivalent of one cow. ! ,ossesslou of sufficient land, i water or feed to insure a. year round operation for a specified j number of livestock. Carpenter said the new rules would give preference In the grant ing of grazing privileges to appll cunts within or near a district who were land owners engaged In the livestock business, boua-fide occu pants or settlers, or owners of wa ter or water rights. Priority In the Issuance of permits would he de pendent on tho character of "huse properties" used for the support of the livestock for which a grazing privilege was sought and on the busls of which the extent of the li cense or permit was computed. These properties would be di vided into two - classifications laud used In connection with live stock operations on the public do main for any threo years or any two consecutive years In tho five year period or Immediately pieced lug enactment ot the Taylor graz ing act on June 28, 193-1 and laud within or in the lmmediato neigh borhood of the federal raugo and so situated tho conduct of eco nomic livestock operations requir ed use of the federal range. Lands to Be Graded Carpentor said the two classes would be divided Into three grades of requirements for primary con sideration: 1. Land dependent by both loca tion and use and full time prior wa ter rights. 2. Laud dependent by use only and full time water. 3. Laud dependent by location only and full time water. Carpenter said provision , had been made for "the maintenance of reasonable number of wild game animals" on the public range. The regulations also authorize Issuance of free use permits for not to ex ceed ten head of work or milch stock. Special rules to meet local conditions may he recommended by reglounl grazers for inclusion in the codo. to Mollywlod, Calif., for a vacation visit and to bo married soon. SALKM. March 21 (AP) Electricity consumption in Oregon last year set an all-time record of 1.018,2X8.273 kilowatt hours, and 8.32 per cent Increase over 1937, N. G. W allace, public utilities com mlHsloner, said today. Revenues of electric compnnfes wore 919,212,501 last year, 7.5u per cent more than In 193(5, Residential and rural consumers used 13.8 per cent more electricity but paid only 9.4 per cent more for ft. the difference reflecting rate reductions during the year and the Increased use of energy in the lower priced brackets of the rate schedules. The average residential consum er used 1,300 kilowatt hours In 1937. compared with 1.H1K In 1930. He paid 2. S3 cents a kilowatt last year, and three centa In 193o. Wallace said the average Oregon domestic consumer used 75 per cent more electricity than Hie ave rage American consumer, but his average rate wan 70 per cent less than the average rate for the en tire nation. Commercial in Industrial consum ers Increased their kilowatt hour consumption 0.95 per cent, while the nmounts paid for the energy IncrcnHcd at tho same rate. Wallace said the business reces sion was responsible for the do criMise In Industrial consumption during the last three months of last year. FARR WILL MARRY EX-FOLLIES GIRL CIIIOAdO, Munll 21. (AD Tommy Kiut, lliilinh henvywettiM clmmiiUm loxtr, iiml til nuncce. Kllrt'u WiMisit'l, fonmr folHos. "utiunor Girl."' wim-o t'U ronto toilny WE CAN FIX ANYTHING City Electric 124 W. Cass St. Phone 233 Floor Sanding and Refinishing CHAS. KEEVER Phong 651-J R. R. 2, Box 220 Roaobura, Ore. DR. G. W. Marshall DENTIST 314 Medical Arts Bldg. Phono 29 Ron. Phone 293-R Evenings by Appointment Yovi cm always make a living with a Chevrolet truck. Why not tradt your passenger car for a good used truck at Hansen Chevrolet Co. HOUSE VOTES FOR INCREASE IN NAVY (Continued from page 1.) tion system. Hear Admiral Andrews, chief of the bureau of navigation, told the committee the additional officers would he needed to command the expanded fleet. . Chairman Vinson (D., Ga.) said the hill would revise the selection system by which the navy pro motes Its officers so that every of ficer would have at leust two chances for selection. If the measure is enacted, many officers who otherwise would be foiced to retire between now and next January would he given un- other chance for promotion and one inoro year of duty, he said. FRED CAMPION OF MELROSE PASSES ON Fred Campion, well known resi dent of Melrose, died at his home Saturday night. Funeral services have not been announced. The body has been removed to the Douglas Funeral Home. HULL VOICES HORROR AT BARCELONA RAIDS (Continued from page 1) WINTER FUEL PRICES OLD GROWTH FIR 4-ft, Green, pep cord . ..... . , 4-tt. Dry Slab, per cord .. 16-Inch Dry, per load . 16-Inch Green, per load . ..... Mill Ends, per load . . 8-ft. Green Slab, per load . 8-ft. Dry Slab, per load sawdust, per unit ........ $2.00 43.00 $4.50 S3.00 $4.50 3.50 S4.50 SC3 Kit HARDWOOD, Oak and Laurel Block, tier -SS'SO HARDWOOD. Oak and Laurel small stove wood, tier ... S300 ROSEBURG LUMBER CO. PHONE 82 Include these provisions: IlritiBli support for league of nations recognition of the Itillan conquest of Ethiopia; withdrawal of all Italian combatants from the Spanish civil war; absolute with drawal of Italian foreh. from the Balearic . Islands. oland and - Lithuania, near armed conflict last week, planned to patch up an old railway Hue bo they could resume friendly com munication, non-existent for near ly 38 years. Prime Minister Chamberlain announced in tho house of com mons he would make an eagerly awaited statement of Dritih for eign policy on Thursday presum ably an announcement of ;whnt Britain would do If Germuny wro to Invade Czechoslovakia. Despite France's urging, nrltatn has refused to commit herself re garding defense of Czechoslovakia.' Germany, still digesting Ausuia. nformed the league of nations hat her new province "no Jonaer considered" a member of tho league. A mysterious roundup of soviot Ittzens was under way in Kussia apparently -an effort to insulato the suspicious regime trout un wanted foreign conacts. Hecent disappearances and arrests Includ ed a secretary of the Moscow of flee of the New York Timf.a and several Russian employes of the United Slates embassy. The war scare over in Poland most newspaper comment centered uround Jews, who were blamed for rioting on Saturday because they assertedly started a run on banks. The students' association of Warsaw by resolution demanded thut all persons who withri;nw their savings should be deprived of citizenship and that the frontier bo closed to Jewish refugees from Austria. The association's youthful chufr man and 28 other students were taken into custody Sunday for in citing aitl-Semitle feeling. A number of Jews vere attack ed Sunday In Warsaw by extreme nationalists, who felt tht govern ment had been too lenient toward Lithuania. T wo person s were k I lied a ml inoro than 1U0 injured 'luring dis orders Saturday. Kor the most part, however, it was a happy Sunday. Polish troops puraded jubilantly but peacefully at Wllno where only a clay before they were concenir.it ec to move against Lltbuuniu, UNPOPULAR COUR8E FORCES . 2 LITHUANIANS TO RESIGN : KAUNAS, Llthuunlu, March 21. (AP) Foreign Minister Lazorai tls and Minister of Justice Sllingus have tendered their resignations to President Smetonu but, it could not be learned today whether they were accepted. ' There wero reporU that Lazorai tls offered his resignation flvei days ago before n show of Polish arms forced Lithuania to bow to j demands for "normalization" of Polish-Lithuanian commercial and diplomatic relations, but that the president would not accept it. Throughout last week's tension lUzoraitis favored reconciul'.iou with Poland. Saturday's compliance with Po land's army-backed ultimatum, however, affected the foreign min ister's political position and caus ed countrywide bitterness. Submission Unpopular Llthunuian stutienL- associations today deolured a ten-day period of mourning to protest the nation's capitulation to Poland. The association members de cided to wear black crepe on their caps until March 31, the date when Lithuania agreed to exchange di plomatic envoys with Poland, as demanded in the Polish note of last week. There was a brief flurry last night at the state opera when a leftist newspaperman tried to read statement demanding the gov ernment resign. Police hi3tled him off, but the audience cheered him wildly. SHIFT IN FOREST v. SERVICE OPPOSED (Continued from page 1) It should be transferred," he said. Senutor Pope, Borah's democrat ic colleague said he was not con vinced that such a transfer woujft! come to puss; thut he had assur tances from high officials thut it wus not contemplated. Borah replied that private 'as surances were "no protection against bucu a thing happening." The senate, he continued, had "ample warning" that such a shift was In the wind. "Tho report which was made by the Brownlow committee recom mended the transfer," he said. "The preaident Bent the report to con gress with his tacit approval. In addition to that, influential mem bers in the administration have urged the transfer." "No Danger," Pope Opines Pope suld, however, that he was convinced "there Is no danger." "If I thought there were any dan ger of the transfer of the forest service from the department of ag riculture to any other department I should oppose the bill," he said., "One of 1 the most important questions congress has ever con fronted is the problem of bringing about efficiency and economy through the reorganization and abolition of unnecessary boards and bureaus," Pope added, asserting thut wus his prime reason for sup- House Wiring By Our Expert a Specialty City Electric 124 W. Cass St. Phone 233 porting the measure and opposing the Wheeler amendment. Borah declared congress had al ready dedicated too much legisla tive power to the executive branch; that congress could no longer effectively protect the In terests of the people business and industry In the matter of tar iffs and other regulation. Senator Bone asserted thut if changes were made by the presi dent without congressional ratifi cation, "the people of our state would wonder why we did not ex ercise some judgment In huving something to say about changing of those functions." In the matter of the forest serv ice transfer, Bone said it "may or may not occur." The Morning AfterTaking Carters Little Liver Pills Let's Clean Up I I V. , and Spruce Up -i I'.. . MORGAN FAMILY 010 IAIN DANCE No excuse for lack of paint and repairs to. your property, now. Our FHA loans for such purposes even for remodel ing and new construction of a modest type makes money available on at tractive rates and repayment terms. Inquire at once. E. 8. McClaln, Manager V. M. Orr, Asst. Manage) ; Itoseburg Branch ot the United States National Bank Head Office, Portland, Oregon MEMBER FBBBHAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 4 miles in a bee-fine 6 miles by road map Gxa.,b... sf Smiles bySTOP-and-GO A mile on your speedometer may easily be a mile and a half to your engine when it's stop and go. HERE'S WHY: In "low" gear, your engine turns over about twelve timet for each turn of the wheels. In "second," it turns about eight in "high," only about four. You drive a mile, but -how far your engine runs de pends on how many times you stop and start how much of the mile is. in low and second gears. Shell engineers found that getting away from a traffic stop can waste enough "undigested" gasoline to carry you !4 of a mile. To cut this waste and its cost, they found a way to rearrange the chemical structure of gasoline, making every drop of fuel usable to your motor under all driving conditions. You can save on the cost of your stop-and-go driv ing by the regular use of Super-Shell. There's a sneii aeaier near you. SUPER-SHELL WHEAT PORTLAND, Ore.. March 21. f AP) Open High Low Close May S3 J .H3J .821 .82J July 77J .77 .771 .771 Sep.' 78 ,78 ,771 ;77i SAVES ON STOP AND GO i